Dexter Horton Trust & Savings Bank v. Clearwater County

235 F. 743, 1916 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1410
CourtDistrict Court, D. Idaho
DecidedJuly 29, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 235 F. 743 (Dexter Horton Trust & Savings Bank v. Clearwater County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Idaho primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dexter Horton Trust & Savings Bank v. Clearwater County, 235 F. 743, 1916 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1410 (D. Idaho 1916).

Opinion

DIETRICH, District Judge.

The plaintiff holds by assignment warrants of the defendant county in the principal sum of $44,072.69, which were issued in 1914 to one M. G. Nease in final payment of a contract dated April 15, 1914, for the cruising of its timber lands for taxation purposes. Altogether Nease cruised 503,997 acres, at the contract price of 12½ cents per acre. The first warrants issued were paid in due course, and all those now outstanding are here involved. The county treasurer, questioning their validity, declined payment, and threatened to divert to the discharge of later warrants all the funds in his hands, whereupon the plaintiff brought this suit for an injunction to restrain him from carrying out his purpose, and requiring him to recognize and pay all warrants in the order of their issuance. Several defenses are interposed. It is charged; (1) That the contract was the result of a collusive and corrupt agreement between Nease and the county commissioners; (2) that the claims upon which the warrants were issued were, pursuant to such fraudulent and collusive understanding, wrongfully allowed; (3) that the contract was improvidently entered into by the board, and the price agreed to be paid was excessive; (4) that the contract was never substantially performed by Nease; (5) that in part the warrants cover claims for the cruising of lands which were not within the terms of the contract; (6) that under the laws of the state of Idaho the subject-matter of the contract is not within the jurisdiction of the board of county commissioners; (7) that the action of the board in letting the contract is violative of section 3 of article 8 of the Constitution of the state, in that the expense is greatly in excess of the revenues provided in the year for which it was incurred, and it was not authorized by a vote of the electors of the county, and was not an ordinary and necessary expense; (8) that upon their face the warrants are, so defective in form that the treasurer is not bound to recognize them; and (9) that the treasurer is without authority to pay them, because the claims for which they were, issued have never been certified as required by law.

I do not attempt to review the evidence upon the issue of collusion or conspiracy. It is necessarily circumstantial, and, as is usually the case, it takes a wide range and is voluminous. Though the view may be entertained that the commissioners acted improvidently and were -wanting in vigilance and care, I am convinced that they were not ac[746]*746tuated by corrupt motives. The inculpatory circumstances surrounding the letting of the contract may all reasonably be referred to their inexperience in public affairs, and their real, even though somewhat grotesque, fear of the so-called “timber companies”; and likewise their want of vigilance in requiring strict performance and their complacence in allowing the claims as presented may very well be explained by their confidence in and reliance upon the assessor’s approval, and their apparent assumption, so generally indulged by the unsophisticated, that the sworn.verification of a claim against the public is a sufficient guaranty of its correctness.

There is a measure of interdependence between the next two defenses that makes it desirable to consider them together. The defendants contend that the agreed rate of 12% cents per acre was an excessive price to pay for cruising, and that in material respects the contractor failed to render the service called for by the terms of the agreement. I am inclined to think that one contention or the other, if not both, must be sustained, for the record leaves no doubt in my mind that 12% cents per acre is greatly in excess of a reasonable compensation for that which was actually .done.

From an examination of the record made by the board of commissioners at the time the contract was let, and a consideration of the manner in which it was gotten up, it is clear that the board expected a thorough and accurate cruise, and that Nease convinced them that that was the kind of cruise he would make. In his written offer, which was accepted, he proposed to make “a very careful” cruise, and the contract' calls for “a careful, complete, and thorough” cruise. Can we' say that the requirement of thoroughness was met by a cruise made through the employment of the cheapest and least thorough of all recognized methods, or that the requirements of carefulness and completeness were satisfied when the areas daily covered by .the cruisers were of unusual, if not extraordinary, extent? The question is suggestive of but one answer. When we consider that for a fairly reliable cruise the double run system is most commonly employed, and that the spring cruise here was generally madé in that manner, and when we further consider the fact that the topographic notations were so placed upon the maps as to signify that a double run was in fact made, and further that the price paid was, to say the least, adequate fully to pay for such a cruise, it is difficult to escape the conclusion that at the time the contract was entered into both parties contemplated a double run. It is of no avail to say that upon averaging up large areas the cruise made will give a fair approximation of the aggregate. It may also be true that a rough estimate of most of the lands would, in a general average, approximate the result of a single run cruise, and it may be that either would enable the assessor to make as fair a valuation of the timber lands as is commonly made upon other classes of property. But that is not what the county contracted for. It could have gotten a' rough estimate or a hasty single run cruise for a fraction of what it agreed to pay, and-whether the action of the board be deemed to be prudent or imprudent in contracting and agreeing to pay for details and a degree of accuracy the value of which is [747]*747more apparent than real, the county is entitled to receive what it is asked to pay for.

[1] The question still remains whether the defendants can now avail themselves of this defense, and in considering it we shall assume that, while the plaintiff purchased the warrants in the open market for value, it holds them subject to all the defenses which would be available against the original payee. Abbott’s Public Securities, § 450; City of Nashville v. Ray, 86 U. S. 468, 22 L. Ed. 164; Wall v. County of Monroe, 103 U. S. 74, 26 L. Ed. 430. There is no charge in the answer that the county commissioners were deceived, or that they were fraudulently induced to audit and allow the claims and order the issuance of the warrants. Upon the other hand, it is expressly alleged that, notwithstanding complete knowledge of the inadequacy of the cruise and its inaccuracies, the board deliberately allowed the claims. While I do not think this averment of complete knowledge is substantiated by the evidence, and while there are certain circumstances, especially that of the misleading “elevation notations,” tending to show a purpose on the part of the contractor to deceive, plainly in the face of the express charge of the possession of full knowledge by the board we are not now at liberty to find that the issuance of the warrants was induced by fraud. The fact that the board did not exact strict performance is not conclusive. If they had the power to make the contract, they also had the power to waive some of its provisions.

[2] In the absence of fraud or collusion, the courts cannot, in an action of this character, revise the discretion of the board touching matters within their jurisdiction.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
235 F. 743, 1916 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1410, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dexter-horton-trust-savings-bank-v-clearwater-county-idd-1916.